Title: 1896 1954
11896 1954
- 60 years Court Sanctioned Apartheid Plessy v.
Ferguson (1896) - Separate but Equal Doctrine
- 40 years post-Dred Scott v. Sanford
- The word citizen as used in the Constitution
does not include slaves
230 Yrs. Post-Civil War
- Post-war constitutional amendments
- 13th Am. abolishing slavery (1865)14th Am.
estab. P I Clause Equal Protection. Applies
only to government action. (1868) - 15th Amendment guaranteeing right to vote
regardless of race (1870) - States Rights a contentious issue
3The Court sanctioned legislatively imposed
segregation in the South and border states in its
1896 decision permitting Louisiana to segregate
railroad cars by race.
4Plessy v. Ferguson
- Forcibly ejected from RR coach Imprisoned
after Paying for and Sitting in a Vacant Seat
reserved for whites only. - Challenged constitutionality of La. statute
- No person shall occupy seats in railway
coaches, other than the ones assigned to them, on
account of the race they belong to. -
5Plessy (cont.)
- Segregation, if truly providing separate yet
equal facilities and accommodations, does not
violate 14th Amendment. - This is a social, not political or constitutional
issue. - Constitution cannot place races on equal footing.
- Must happen voluntarily.
6Plessy (cont.)
- Separate but equal
- Satisfies formal equality
- Kept both races separate
- Applied equally to both
- Only Negative if one race chooses to see it that
way
7Plessy DISSENT
- Justice J. M. Harlan
- Constitution is Color-blind neither Knows nor
Tolerates classes. - Compares decision to Dred Scott
- Arbitrary Racial Separation of Citizens is Badge
of Servitude - Inconsistent w/ Civil Freedom Equality
8Plessy Implications
- Far-reaching consequences
- Systematic and Institutional Racial Segregation
of Everyday Life - Restaurants
- Inns
- Transportation
- Education
- Waiting Rooms
9Greyhound Rest Stop atKentucky-Tennessee Border
(1943)Colored Dining Room In Rear
10Billingsville Elementary School
11Drinking Fountain for Blacks
12Late 1890s early 1900s
- 187 Lynchings per Year, mostly in South
- Encyclopedia Brittanica
- Nearly unanimous consent of anthropologists ...
the Negro occupies the lowest position in the
evolutionary scale - Grandfather Clauses
- Maintained Separation of Poor Blacks Whites by
Grandfathering in Votes of Ppl. Whose
Ancestors Voted before Reconstruction. Lifted
Poll Taxes, Property Taxes, Literacy Screening.
131900s through Teens
- 1919 lynching of accused rapist
- Chased by dogs, shot, captured
- No trial.
- Tennessee News headlines
- 3,000 will burn negro. J. Hartfield will be
lynched by mob at 500 today. Negro is jerky
sullen as burning hour nears. - Crowd of Whites arrives with Picnic Baskets, and
Carried off Souvenirs of Body.
14Alabama Lynching (kids look on)
15Lynching Uniquely American(Post Card)
16Roaring Twenties
- 19th Amendment Prohibition on Alcohol
- Speakeasies, Bathtub Gin, Organized Crime
- Religious Fundamentalism
- Scopes Monkey Trial (Clarence Darrow)
- White Superiority based in Christianity
- Economic Prosperity for Whites
17The Roaring Twenties
- Major Social Technological Changes
- Disillusionment following WWI
- Conservative Republican presidents
- Immigration limited to 2 of each Ethnic Group
- Mechanized Farming
18Sharecropping Poverty
- Planters exploited system
- Sharecroppers often wound up in debt
- No Income during Off-Season, Croppers Forced to
Buy Food Clothing on Credit from Plantation
Commissaries.
191920s 5-year-old Boy Chimney Sweep
20Sharecropping Poverty
- Tenants often forced to sell their share of Crop
to Plantation at Below-Market Prices. - While Planters enjoyed great prosperity, Tenants
Stuck in Endless Debt Cycle. - Plantations consolidated and centralized
- Opportunity for advancement gone
- Entrenched in poverty, sharecroppers Headed North
for industrial jobs.
21Great Migration
- Factory Jobs
- The exodus began with World War I steady stream
of Blacks began leaving the South for the North
and the West. - Planters Fortunes Relied on Black Labor
- Determined to keep Blacks on their Plantations
- Some Planters offered Better Conditions Others
Resorted to violence - Escaped in cloak of darkness
- Train Stations Guards pulled Blacks off Trains
and returned them to Plantations.
22Great Depression
- Poor distribution of Purchasing Power among
Minorities Blue Collar - Unable to Buy Cars Houses to Maintain Econ
Growth - Farm income declined 66 from 1920 to 1929
- 68 of Blacks worked on Farms or as Domestics
- Blacks Last In, First Out of Jobs
23Convict Lease System
- Imprisoned Black Men in same manner as
Sharecropping. - Jailed on False Charges of Vagrancy, then Hired
Out as Cheap Labor to Local Whites - Extremely Difficult to Avoid this System
241920s Education
- Migration Spurred on Lack of Educational
Opportunities in South - White school boards seldom hired enough teachers
for Black students - Teachers rarely College Grads
- Some So. Counties had a 1 to 100 Teacher-Student
Ratio - Officials refused to Open Schools until every
Last Bit of Harvest Brought in, even if it took
several extra Months.
251920s N.C., Oasis in DesertSecond Ward High
School Diplomas for Colored People
261930s Word Racism
- Word First Commonly used to Describe Nazi
Theories - White So. Supremacists used Word to Justify why
Jim Crow Reqd to kepp Blacks Separated
Unequal. - Fear of Sexual Contamination via Rape or
Inter-Marriage - Efforts to guarantee Race Purity in the American
South anticipated aspects of the official Nazi
persecution of Jews in the 1930s.
27KKK poster from 1930s
28Ku Klux Klan
- Blacks Hanged or Burned to death by KKK Lynch
Mobs to ensure Color Line Scrupulously Upheld
29KKK Business Card
30Amarillo, Texas
311940s Mississippi
321940s S.C. Train Station Colored Waiting Room
331950s
34Bombingham, Alabama
- 1955 Bus Boycott led by Reverend Martin Luther
King - Conflicts between the Civil Rights Movement
Those who Fought for White Way of Life. - Between 1948-1965, over 200 Black Churches
Homes in the Deep South bombed - Alabama the worst
35Home on The Rails
361955 M. L. K. s 1st Arrest
37Civil Rights Time Line
- 1954 Brown v. Board decision
- 1955 Rosa Parks (NAACP) refuses to give up Bus
Seat - 1957 Southern Christian Leadership Conference
major force in Civil Rights - Dr. King SCLCs 1st President
- Pres. Eisenhower sends troops to intervene in
Desegregation - Little Rock, Arkansas
38Civil Rights Time Line (cont.)
- 1960 Sit-ins
- 1961 Freedom Riders Bus test rides
- Mob sets Bus Ablaze
- 1963 Churches Blown Up Medger Evers (NAACP)
murdered - De La Beckwith NOT Convicted until 1993
- 1964 Civil Rights Act of 1964
- 1965 Voting Rights Act Eases Registration for
Blacks - 1968 Reverend King SHOT
- 1968 Civil Rights Act of 1968 Prevents Housing
Discrimination.
391950s NAACP Recruitment Poster
40Brown I II
- Pre-Brown Didnt have to examine separate but
equal to grant relief to black plaintiffs Brown I - Brown I Separate but equal not OK
- Brown II Told district courts to fashion
equitable remedies to effectuate constitutional
requirements - racially nondiscriminatory school system
- prompt reasonable start
41Brown v. Board TeamPost-Victory (Thurgood
Marshall center)
42Brown Family
43Griffin, Green, Civil Rights Act
- Civil Rights Act of 1964
- School board argued the statute forbids bussing
order by court - Court finds that statute concerned with limiting
judicial/government jurisdiction - No power to deal with de facto segregation
- De jure segregation not just racial imbalance,
court must find underlying policy of segregation - Griffin Green cases
- School districts need to implement Brown I II
promptly - Dilatory tactics from school boards will not be
tolerated by the courts.
44Swann I (Dist. Ct.)
- Facts School board had residential patterns
which resulted in school segregation. - Had three chances and fail to come up with
acceptable plan for the court - Ct appoints Dr. Finger to fix school boards
unacceptable plan - Remedy Court approves portion of board plan
adds Fingers elementary school plan. - High Schools (board plan) Redrawing school
attendance lines --gt 17 - 36 black students in
each of 9 high schools. Additionally 300 black
students transferred to predominantly white high
schools. - 1500 students bussed under plan (ct estimate) v.
2500 (school board estimate)
45Swann I Dist. Ct. (cont.)
- Junior High
- 4 options (rezone, 2-way transport., reassign
pupils, or adopt Finger plan) - Board chose Finger plan (rezoning combined with
satellite districts --gt black kids from inner
city to white suburban schools) - 2500 students bussed under plan (court estimate)
vs 4300 students bussed (school board estimate) - Elementary School Finger plan implemented -
geographic zoning - ratio of not less than 60/40
white to blacks --gt increase of 39 of students
being bussed / 32 increase in buses - 9300 students (court estimate) vs. 12,500 (school
board estimate) - 90 buses (court estimate) vs. 269 (School Board
Est.) - Total Expenditures 3.5 million (School Board
Est.) - Operating Costs 266,000 (school board
estimate) vs. 586,800 (school board estimate) - Overall increases of 56 of pupils being shipped
49 increase in fleet of buses
46Swann II (4th Cir. Ct. Appeals)
- Argument on Appeal
- Bussing improper in violation of the Civil Rights
Act - court disagrees - Holding
- Affirmed Dist. Ct. Order Regarding Senior Jr.
High Schools - Remanded Elementary School portion, finding
bussing requirements too great of a burden on
school district - Courts Adopts Test of Reasonableness
- If School Dist. makes reasonable effort, then
courts wont necessarily find unconstitutional. - If despite all reasonable efforts to desegregate,
some schools continue to be segregated due to the
neighborhoods, additional steps must be taken
47Swann II (4th Cir. Ct. Appeals) cont.
- Remand Back to District Court to revise the
Elementary School portion of the order.
Appellate court suggests alternatives to bussing
which include - Rezoning with or without satellite district
schools - Pairing schools - exchange of pupils between one
white and one black school - Grouping - similar to pairing but with multiple
schools - School consolidation
- Court cautions against not rigidly adhering to
the 60/40 ratio - PROMPT ACTION Essential!
- Order Issued May 26, 1970
- Plaintiffs must file new plan by June 30, 1970
after consulting with experts from Dept. of
Health, Ed. Welfare
48Swann III Sup. Ct.
- Argument on Appeal Swann moved for further
relief based on Green companion cases - Holding Reversed court of appeals - restored
district court in full - once violation has occurred, court has wide range
of equitable powers - Central Issue What is the scope of the courts
equitable powers in four situations - Situation 1 Use of racial quotas (60/40 ratio)
- Dist Ct created 71/29 percent ratio based on
general spread of population as a starting point
for shaping remedies - School board defaulted on duty to come up with an
acceptable - Supreme court held that this limited use of ratio
was acceptable
49Swann III Sup. Ct. (cont.)
- Situation 2 Is the elimination of every
all-white/black school necessary? - D Ct acceptable to not all have to be
desegregated - S Ct requires that the plan require for a
minority to majority transfers within the
district - Also, where the plan doesnt eliminate all
one-race schools, the school board has the burden
of showing that this is not the result of present
or past discriminatory actions
50Swann III Sup. Ct. (cont.)
- Situation 3 Gerrymandering of School Dists or
Attendant Zones - Dist. Ct Plan had created zones that were not
contiguous and broadly spread out through the
district - S Ct Perfectly acceptable to do this
- S Ct Recognize limits inherent to this remedy
51Swann III Sup. Ct. (cont.)
- Situation 4 Bussing
- D Ct Ordered extensive bussing at the
elementary school level - S Ct Bussing an acceptable remedy
- Bussing Integral Part of System has been for
years - 18 million of nations public school kids
transported by bus in 1969 - Limits Where distance or time of travel is
extensive enough to impinge on health of child or
the educational process. - Decree provided that the busses would be on
direct routes - Elementary school - 7 miles, 35 minutes at most
- School board tried to argue at appellate level
that due to traffic etc would make it take
forever - S Ct compares with the original school board plan
where average trip was 15 miles one way taking
over one hour. - Desegregation plans cannot be limited to walk in
schools
52Swann III Sup. Ct. (cont.)
- Cant evaluate if Dist. Ct. was reasonable,
feasible, or workable because plan had yet to be
implemented - Substance over form (yeah!)
- Future Equitable Authority Courts have authority
to revisit the issue to fix future problems. - No year-by-year adjustments required
- Limited to cases where there is a showing that
school authorities or state officials have
deliberately tried to fix or alter demographic
patterns to affect racial composition of schools.
53Belk Decision - 2001
- Unitary Status has been achieved
- Race-based admission policy for magnet schools
unconstitutional - Courts declined to impose new injunctions
54As of 1999
- 27 of the 57 schools primarily one race
- 18 schools over 85 black
- 9 schools over 85 white